Skip to content

News & Events

Stay informed about research breakthroughs, university announcements, and opportunities to engage with Nagoya University's dynamic global community.

Admissions

Study in Japan's fourth largest city, and home to some of its most well-known companies—all without the Tokyo prices and Kyoto crowds.

Academics

Pursue your interests through one of our English or Japanese language programs, selecting from a wide variety of specialized fields.

Campus life

Find out about our facilities, comprehensive support, extracurricular activities, and the safe and welcoming community that fosters lifelong connections and growth.

About

Meet our leadership and discover the inclusive values and academic heritage that drive Nagoya University's contributions to knowledge and society.

A new synthesis method for three-dimensional nanocarbons: Connecting carbon by catalysis to create octagonal structures

A new synthesis method creates curved octagonal structures by linking benzene rings. Credit: Issey Takahashi

A team of scientists led by Kenichiro Itami, Professor and Director of the Institute of Transformative Bio-Molecules (WPI-ITbM), has developed a new method for the synthesis of three-dimensional nanocarbons with the potential to advance materials science.

Three-dimensional nanocarbons, next-generation materials with superior physical characteristics which are expected to find uses in fuel cells and organic electronics, have thus far been extremely challenging to synthesize in a precise and practical fashion. This new method uses a palladium catalyst to connect polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to form an octagonal structure, enabling successful three-dimensional nanocarbon molecule synthesis.

Nanocarbons, such as the fullerene (a sphere, recipient of the 1996 Nobel Prize), the carbon nanotube (a cylinder, discovered in 1991) and graphene (a sheet, recipient of the 2010 Nobel Prize) have attracted a great deal of attention as functional molecules with a variety of different properties. Since Mackay et al. put forward their theory in 1991, a variety of periodic three-dimensional nanocarbons have been proposed. However, these have been extraordinarily difficult to synthesize. A particular challenge is the eight-membered ring structure, which appears periodically, necessitating an efficient method for its synthesis. To do so, Dr Itami’s research team developed a new method for connecting polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons using a palladium catalyst to produce eight-membered rings via cross-coupling, the first reaction of its type in the world.

The success of this research represents a revolutionary achievement in three-dimensional nanocarbon molecule synthesis. It is expected to lead to the discovery and elucidation of further novel properties and the development of next-generation functional materials.

Journal Information

The article "Creation of negatively curved polyaromatics enabled by annulative coupling that forms an eight-membered ring" by Satoshi Matsubara, Yoshito Koga, Yasutomo Segawa, Kei Murakami and Kenichiro Itami is published in Nature Catalysis at DOI: 10.1038/s41929-020-0487-0

Details about the research

http://www.itbm.nagoya-u.ac.jp/en/research/2020/07/post-21.php

Find out more about ITbM

http://www.itbm.nagoya-u.ac.jp/

We use cookies
By clicking "Accept Cookies," you agree to the use of cookies to improve your user experience, optimize the site, produce statistics, and interact with social networks.
Our Site Policy